yes. the solubility in water is as follows:
3.6 g/100 mL (0 °C)
7.4 g/100 mL (20 °C)
48 g/100 mL (100 °C)
there is no element with the symbol R, so perhaps it is meant to read CrCl6 which is Chromium Chloride. Hope this helps! for more info on Chromium Chloride visit http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chromium(III)_chloride
The chemical equation is:FeS + 2 HCl = FeCl2 + H2S
The correct formula for iron(ll) bromide is FeBr2.
The chemical formula for copper(ll) sulfate is CuSO4.
LL
The formula for copper (ll) chloride is CuCl2.
CuCl2 :)
HgBr2
Copper II chloride (CuCl2) is an ionic compound because copper is a metal and chloride is a non-metal. Like all ionic compounds in aqueous solutions (i.e., dissolved in water), it conducts electricity.
9007 QL 9007 (LL optional)
there is no element with the symbol R, so perhaps it is meant to read CrCl6 which is Chromium Chloride. Hope this helps! for more info on Chromium Chloride visit http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chromium(III)_chloride
The Roman numeral following the cation tells you the oxidation number of that cation. For example, Cu(ll)chloride tags you it is CuCl2 because the (ll) after Cu indicates an ox. no. of 2+.
well it depends if it can melt if the state changes at a hot temperature= high melting point ll ll ll ll ll ll cold ll = low melting point
water
The Roman numeral following the cation tells you the oxidation number of that cation. For example, Cu(ll)chloride tags you it is CuCl2 because the (ll) after Cu indicates an ox. no. of 2+.
What is a PO420 in a 2002 mercury cougar: Now if your car is 2.0L DOHC. OBD ll PO420 : Catalyst Efficiency Below Threshold (BANK 1). Hope this helps...
Copper (III) chloride. Note that this is theoretical compound copper does have a +3 oxidation stae in some complexes but does not from compounds such as CuCl3. The only halides known are +1 oxdtn state:- CuCl, CuBr, CuI +2 oxdtn state : CuF2, CuCl2, CuBr2